We awoke to a flood in the kitchen. I traced the flood back to the fridge door ice dispenser. I found the ice tray frozen in a sheet of ice in the bottom of the ice container. I took two Philips screws out of the front of the ice maker then slid the entire unit forward to detach it. I unplugged the ice maker and let it thaw out on the front porch in the sun. The round protuberance at the back of the ice tray was broken off completely. I ordered a replacement for my Samsung fridge from AppliancePartsPros.com on one day and it came the next day! I replaced the ice tray in the ice maker and put it back together. My family and I now have an operating Ice maker again. It actually works better, so I think it may have been defective all along. I didn't even have left over screws! LOL!

Dropped light panel by removing two screws with socket set. Unplugged two terminals and unclipped the light socket from the base. Then just clipped the new socket onto the base, plugged the connectors onto the terminals and remounted the base. Total job was less than 15 minutes.

Purchased new evaporator/heater/sensor assembly from appliance parts. Removed new heater, sensor and wire harness from new assembly and from existing unit in refrig section. Then installed new heater and sensor on old refrig evaporator, avoiding complex soldering and recharge with Freon. Once repaired all failure indications cleared and refrigerator section performing like new. Also purchased new heater for water tank and several broken plastic parts that went in in 2 minutes. Changed door light switch which had become intermittent.

The commentary on the web site talked about the clicking and no compressor running. It mentioned it could be the compressor relay and the thermal overheat device was kicking off the power to keep the compressor from over heating. They said if the relay rattled after you took it off the compressor, that it would be bad. Well, the relay did not rattle. I thought maybe the compressor capacitor was bad, but the top of the cap with the connections was not domed at all (it was completely flat) which usually indicates a good cap. Replaced just the relay first. Worked like a charm when I plugged it in. The 12 yr old relay was just old and broke. It was very easy to replace. The new relay had a different number than the old part but stated it was the replacement to use. I would recommend that anyone take a picture of the setup before parts are removed so you know what wire goes where and how the thing is oriented. It has been a week since the relay was replaced and the system is running the usual -4F freezer with a 38F fridge section. All for less than 9 dollars +shipping for the relay. What a deal. The initial diagnosis took about an hour. I never did it before. The replacement took 15 minutes.